Key Takeaways:
- Resurfacing = new boards and railing on existing frame — assumes joists and beams are structurally sound
- Cost: 40–60% less than a full rebuild ($25–$45/sq ft vs $50–$110/sq ft)
- Critical first step: structural inspection of the frame — never resurface over rotted joists
- Best for: pressure-treated decks 10–15 yrs old where surface failed but frame is dry
- Don't resurface if: ledger compromised, frost-heaved footings, joists soft
When Resurfacing Makes Sense
Pressure-treated decks fail in a predictable pattern. The top surface degrades first (UV, water, foot traffic) while the framing underneath stays dry (covered by the deck, no direct UV).
If your deck:
- Has cracked, splintered, or rotted surface boards
- Has dry, sound joists (probe with awl, no soft spots)
- Has a flashed, secure ledger
- Has plumb, stable posts
…then resurfacing saves you $10,000–$30,000 vs tearing it all down.
What's Replaced in a Resurface
| Component | Replaced |
|---|---|
| Deck boards | ✓ Yes |
| Railing system | ✓ Usually yes (code may have changed) |
| Stair treads & risers | ✓ Yes |
| Stair stringers | ⚠ Inspect — replace if cracked |
| Joists | ✕ No (unless individual rot) |
| Beams | ✕ No |
| Posts | ⚠ Inspect at base |
| Ledger | ⚠ Reseal flashing if needed |
| Footings | ✕ No (unless heaved) |
Material Upgrade During Resurface
This is the perfect time to upgrade materials. The labor cost is the same whether you resurface with pressure-treated, cedar, composite, or PVC:
| New surface | Cost premium over PT |
|---|---|
| Pressure-treated (like-for-like) | Baseline |
| Cedar | +$3–$6/sq ft |
| Composite (Trex Enhance) | +$4–$8/sq ft |
| Composite (Trex Transcend) | +$7–$12/sq ft |
| PVC (AZEK) | +$10–$15/sq ft |
Most clients upgrade from PT to composite during resurfacing. The math works because labor (the bigger cost) is spent regardless.
Process
- Inspection ($150, credited): probe all joists, beams, ledger, posts, footings
- Written go/no-go report — if rot is found, we spec a rebuild instead
- Demo: remove old decking, railing, stairs, fasteners
- Frame prep: replace any compromised lumber, re-flash ledger if needed
- Joist tape: install butyl tape on top of every joist (preserves new wood/composite from below)
- New decking: install per manufacturer spec, hidden fasteners where applicable
- New railing: code-current (post 1996, 36"/42" rules apply)
- Stair refresh: new treads/risers; full stair replacement if stringers cracked
- Final inspection: structural sign-off + permit close-out (if pulled)
Cost Examples
| Project | Size | New surface | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Resurface 200 sq ft (PT → composite) | 200 sq ft | Trex Enhance + aluminum railing | $7,000–$12,500 |
| Resurface 300 sq ft (PT → cedar) | 300 sq ft | Cedar + cedar rail | $9,000–$15,500 |
| Resurface 400 sq ft (PT → PVC) | 400 sq ft | AZEK + glass railing | $18,000–$32,500 |
Compare to full new builds at $15,000–$25,000 (200 sq ft), $24,000–$40,000 (300), $36,000–$60,000 (400).
What Resurfacing Cannot Fix
- Framing under-spec for current code (joist size too small, post spacing too wide)
- Inadequate footings that've heaved
- Wrong joist height for any new code-required guard system
- Deck added to a house without proper ledger flashing — water has been getting in for years
If we find any of these, we'll recommend full rebuild — and explain exactly why, with photos.
Honest Edge Case
Sometimes resurfacing is borderline. The frame is mostly OK but a few joists are questionable. We'll quote both options:
- Resurface + selective joist replacement: $X
- Full rebuild: $Y
Often the difference is small ($3,000–$6,000) and rebuild gives you a fresh 25–50 year warranty. We'll lay out the trade-off; you decide.
Request a resurfacing quote or read about deck repair options.
See also: repair vs rebuild decision • composite upgrade options
